Monthly Archive for December, 2007

Noma and Grandma

I wanted to take my grandma to noma for a very special reason, and I’ll tell you, but first I need you to know a little bit about her to put it all into perspective.

My grandmother grew up in a working-class Østerbro (Copenhagen) flat during the thirties and the 2. world war and she had no brothers or sisters. Both her mum and dad were working all day, my great granddad at De Danske Bomuldsspinderier (cotton spinning factory) although he really was a butcher, and my great grandmother was employed by a big department store (Wessel & Vett). My grandmother had her own key to lock herself in, when she got home from school. They were not rich, but the impression I have, from what she tells me, is that they were happy all the same. The home was rich on love. When grandma was a child, my great granddad took her out by bicycle and showed her the city of Copenhagen and its cultural life. It seems to me that the two were very close.

Noma’s entrance

When I was a kid my grandma did the same thing to me. Every once a year we would go to the theatre and watch a musical, which she adores. She also took me to the museums like the working class museum or to the Open Air Museum with more than 50 farms, mills and houses from the period 1650-1950. I love that old place because the history is so visible to you there, the fact that you can go directly inside such an old house, see with your own eyes and very easily imagine how life was like for the Danes at that time. I don’t think that I would have ever seen a cow being milked nor tasted the fresh milk if my grandmother hadn’t taken me to this museum. I’m so grateful for all these experiences full of cultural impulses and history that she gave me, and I am grateful for the wonderful time we’ve spend together. Maybe she understood me in a way, being an only child, which I was too for the first 12 years of my life.

Grandma is also a great cook and she has always created wonderful tasty courses for me, traditional Danish dishes like “frikadeller”, “krebinetter” (meat balls), delicious and tasty soups and pork roast with crispy cracklings. One of the best things about sleeping over at her place was the waking up early in the morning, the chilly room and my nose cold, and then to step into the warm living room, getting breakfast and drinking tea, warming me. It made me feel loved.

Bread

Anyway, I desired to give her something back and to give her a piece of the culture from my world, so to speak. My gastronomical interest, my kind of having a good time. She is a food lover like me, so I was certain that she would love Rene Redzepi’s amazing food. I wanted her to try the absolute best for once. Best in my view, of course. So for her birthday, my present for her was a lunch at noma with me.

When the great day arose, to my great surprise Rene and his team had prepared a whole set menu just for me ensuring I would not get something I had tried before. Preparing me for this event I had in advance decided what food and wine I would have liked to order, but now not knowing what I would be eating I needed a piece of advice one the wine. I asked for White Burgundy and Frederik offered me three choices: A 2004 Remi Jobard, Bourgogne Blanc, 2002 Puligny-Montrachet by Châteaux Puligny-Montrachet and a 2000 Maison Leroy, Meursault. When I saw the combination of my favourite Burgundy area with the producer I was dying to try out, the choice was easy.

2000 Leroy, Meursault

2000 Leroy, Meursault, Burgundy

I just had to try that Leroy - and what an excellent choice! If I were French, I would probably have heard the Marseillaise singing in my head – OOH MY GOD (said like Janice from Friends) what a magnificent wine. It was alive! The vivid way that it swirled around in my mouth was amazing, stunning, and made me think of champagne, but without the bubbles. The very full taste of fruit and oak, mineral, clear and powerful Chardonnay taste amazed me. At the same time it was elegant and sophisticated. I should have counted the seconds how long the finish stayed in my gums. My grandmother said that she wasn’t able to gargle it the way that I did and to let the wine stay in the mouth, but that didn’t matter, because the flavours were there anyway for almost minutes. It was weak on tannins and superbly balanced with acidity which made the wine appear crispy and not too acidic in the rich after-taste. Naturally, the wine matched all the dishes. The colour was dark golden And the nose – I tell you, full of fruit, very clear and pure. Trine loves Leroy. No question about that.

Chest nuts, Löjrom and cress

Chest nuts, walnuts, Löjrom, milk skin and cress

We were told to eat this thing in small bites, and that completely made sense. The dish was very delicate and fine in taste, like almost just hints of flavours instead of the real thing. The chest nuts were raw and crispy and mild like the milk skin and not too salty orange rows. It was only the bits of walnut and the cress that had a distinct taste. They fired up the dish and made it sophisticated. The crispiness of the nuts and the popping feeling of the Löjrom rows entertained my mouth in a funny and delighting way.

Grandma

My dearest grandma “Momsemor”

A marvellous start for this lunch, which I was thrilled about. After all it was the first noma course my grandma got and I wanted her to be impressed. And luckily she was.

Before the first course she had dwelled on the fish and chicken skin snacks, the baked porridge and popped sago, and excitedly guzzled the delicious, pickled and smoked quail’s egg. She marvelled at at the appetizers – as she did with the warm bread inside the felt basket I had let her open.

Razor clams and horseradish

Razor clams and horseradish ”snow”, parsley and dill

The clams had a slight sweet taste that was kicked by the parsley jelly around it and by the dill juice as well as the spicy horseradish. I just love it when such a simple dish can appear delighting in both sight and taste. With this dish I experience something that moved me the same way I got moved, when I dined at noma the first time. It’s how pure the food tastes. Untouched like if I had found the products at and in the sea by a dessert island.

Grandma’s comment on this was, quote: “This is a tasting experience!”

Langoustines and Oysters Emulsion

Langoustines, Oyster emulsion and sea weed

If this isn’t the highlight of all that I have eaten at noma, it certainly is within top three. You know it’s so hard to mark out which one of noma’s dishes is the best. I have become especially keen on oysters lately, the rich and meaty ones, and the small green creamy tops on this stone had the most delicious and full oyster taste, exactly like fresh raw ones. We got no cutlery to eat with and used our fingers to suck up the most moist, delicate and huge langoustine dipped in the green oyster emulsion. Roasted sea weed had been sprinkled about and balanced the flavours. I was moved. A wonderful plate – or stone more likely.

Leeks and Truffles

Leeks and milk skin, Rape seed oil and truffle from Gotland

I have been eating truffles for nearly twenty years, all kinds, the black Norcia ones, the white Alba diamonds and the summer truffles. Being the month of November I kinda hoped I would get the chance of tasting Gotland truffles, which would be a first time. I can honestly say that the quality of these Swedish summer truffles hit me right in my eyes, nose and palate. Many and thin slices gave evidence of a big truffle, which could impossibly be more than a couple of days old, considering the still light moist interior with the hard and rocky peel. And the smell, my goodness, so good and very powerful, much more than I had imagined. Trust me.

The leek was very delicate and tender, the croutons added salt and fatness like the rape seed oil. A flawless course.

Lobster

Icelandic lobster and sea weed, stems and roots of vegetables

The lobster was just lovely, and it was generously served with crispy and tasty vegetables of a head of celery, celery root and viper’s grass. The lobster was cooked to perfection and was moist and delicious and enhanced the freshness in the wine. The sea weed gave a full flavour to the completeness of the dish’s taste as a whole.

A few of the vegetables were a bit too crispy to my taste, especially the viper’s grass, which should have been cooked a little bit more. I’ve been arguing with myself whether or not it’s fair to judge the vegetables as being too hard in texture. I have come to the conclusion that the fact of even questioning whether the vegetables were too raw-ish and making me think that, that alone justifies my critique. If the vegetables had been perfectly cooked I would only have thought how divine this dish would be.

Pheasant

Pheasant, apples and beetroot, chickweed and capers of elderberries

The main – or last salty course comprised pheasant that was seasoned with smoked marrow, chickweed and capers made from elderberries. The beetroots were both cooked and thus soft and also raw and sliced in thin leaves, and they were both a good match for the very nice and tender peasant meat. The chickweed added bitterness to the dish and balanced the full and slight sweetness of it.

Going back to the fabulous wine, which had now aired for a couple of hours. I was amazed how even more powerful and fruity the nose was and how extremely full and oily the taste was without being fuss, or too oaked in flavour. It was really perfectly balanced with acidity and tannins, and the after-taste was deep and lasting. By all means a seducing wine.

A Heavenly Dessert

Cloud berries sorbet and meringues, carrot cake crumpling and herbs granite

This is one of the very best desserts noma has ever made me. You can almost see how well composed it is. I found myself in heaven again. What made it remarkable was the citrus taste balanced with the sweetness, and the cold granite making it fresh. The carrot’s crumple and the meringues provided completeness to the flavour – a whole new tasting experience.

Grandma was a little bit sceptical, when she heard about the meringues, which she’d imagine would be crunchy and crispy. Frederik ensured her that this wasn’t the case. And when she tasted the dessert she must capitulate. It was simply a divine dessert.

We finished up in the lounge with a very strong cup of coffee and a doubled set of the fantastic beetroots fødeboller and a nice chat with Lau, who started his evening shift by that time. But that coffee? I had certainly met my match there, could almost see that the black fluid was thicker than ever; it was great. I quickly ate my two flødeboller and grandma asked how on earth that was possible – after all this very good food, how could I possibly have room for even more. Well… I wouldn’t know when I would another chance again. Then also she snatched the second one.

I wanted to take grandma to noma for a very special reason. First of all to please her like she had pleased me when I was a kid. Another reason was that I wanted to see the to different styles of Danish cooking meeting each other. I was brimful of curiosity to know how the master of traditional, solid Danish cuisine would find noma’s new fine and sophisticated dining. What was the result? They loved each other – well grandma certainly loved noma.

I was happy to see that grandma was able to comprehend and appreciate the innovative style of Rene Redzepi’s interpretation of the Nordic products and Nordic cuisine.

I felt proud, and funnily my grandma looked proud too.

Thank you Frederik for a perfect waiting, Lau for being a sweetie and to you, Rene, for the food which is making me float heavenly for days.

London Eats

Just back from London, and I had a great time there, I was really lucky that all my eats turned out to be lovely in their own way.

I stayed at the nice and old stylish Thistle Hotel in Bloomsbury which offered wifi in the rooms, so I could connect to cyberspace as often as I wanted. It’s funny how I quickly adapt to my new environment and start getting some sort of home feeling about a pretty standard hotel room.

My Tube Stop

Tottenham Court Road was my stop, and after a couple of days I was habituated with the area and knew my way around the tube, the directions of the Central Line and the quickest way to my hotel. That is nice when it rains, as it’s seems quite impossible to get a taxi in London, when it rains.

White House

One of the things I love about visiting cities, apart from the dining I mean, is to walk around and watch the architecture and buildings of it. London is beautiful. Most of all I adore the scrolled Victorian houses and the white and majestic neoclassical style buildings with the stairs in front of the house, which is very different from what the Danish blocks look like.

I could spent all day long walking around London, looking at buildings and people, cars, telephone boxes, policemen and suck in the whole atmosphere of this multi cultural and vivid city. And take photographs.

A Beautiful Balchony

But I also spent some time checking out a few of the British eateries. My hard investigation had paid off. Every planned meal was very good.

I spontaneously found The Cow in the Zagat guide, when I was looking for a place to have sea food, preferably in the Notting Hill area. In the end it wasn’t a fish but a huge Aberdeen Angus steak that made my main course. It was so delicious and very tasty with a very rich meat flavour. I went there with a friend of mine from Argentina. You know how they produce gorgeous steaks in that country (if not then take a look at Luxeat’s boeuf here). She got a taster and she too found the steak great and this must be a quality stamp for The Cow. I did eat some sea food there, by the way, we shared a plate with two of three different kinds of oysters from Ireland, England and France. We both agreed that the French ones were the most delicious ones, not too jelly-like and with a delicate taste.

My Sweet Tooth

I also managed to pop into a Baker and Spice café as well for a cup of tea and a cheesecake and satisfy my craving for sweets. Cheesecake is amongst my favourites. It’s the sourness and fruit combined with the creamy taste that I find beguiling.

Anyway, back to the very good food. Like I had announced on my Wish List page I had booked tables at St. John, Texture and Fat Duck. My last evening I went too St. John Bread and Wine. I was so thrilled about St. John’s the first night and desired to go back, but it was fully booked on the Friday. Instead the kind waiter set me up at Wine & Bread, which I’ll tell more about when I’m posting St. John.

I the next coming weeks I’ll write up my experiences of Texture, the two St. John places and, of course, Fat Duck.

But before that, I have a little noma lunch to write up as well. ;-) My luck the Christmas holidays are coming up real soon.

A Falsled Kro Appetizer

I don’t quite remember the first time I heard about the adorable place of Falsled Kro, and it has always been my dream to go there one day. I didn’t seriously expect to ever go there, though, until I initiated this blog about very good food.

On the road again

Stuck once again in Copenhagen suburb traffic Friday afternoon, I sat thinking of what to come, what the food would be like. I haven’t really read any reviews of Falsled Kro as such. I suppose I know a good handful of people who have been there, but not enough to provide me with a clear definition of what to expect. Something out of this world, and stunning. The quintessence of Danish fine dining – this is what I imagined.

This is not a proper review of Falsled, though. I was invited to join a party of 20 people and I had no influence whatsoever on neither food nor wine. I don’t think it’s fair to judge the place when the conditions are not the same as when I go by myself. But I’d still like to write up my thoughts of this experience and to show you my photos.

The old inn was wrapped in a cold and wet darkness, but beautifully lit up with delicate candles in the trees and at the entrance. The little courtyard was decorated with evergreens, crocks and a few flowers. The thatched roofs together with the subtle Christmas decoration made the setting even more adorable and romantic, and certainly not less fairy tale-like than I had expected.

The romance and the classic design continued indoor, the calm and elegant feeling that surrounded the place was emphasized by the open fire place in one of the first rooms I entered. Then other small rooms followed where drinks or coffee were served.

Champagne and the snack

We started out in the coffee room with a selection of snacks and a glass of champagne, which I found wonderful. One of the best non-rosé bubbles I have tasted in my short champagnish life. It was a blanc de blanc and the nose was full of Chardonnay fruit, a fine and really pure scent and striking taste of Chardonnay which was followed by a restrained acidity that made it sophisticated. I loved it. It matched both the salty chips, pastry sticks with mayonnaise dip, the quail’s egg, the small fried pasty packages and even the sweet pop corns.

I was puzzled about one thing though, that had nothing to do with the drink nor the food. It was the chairs. Tell me something please, how on earth can a place like this furniture a room with braided seated chairs when the place is frequented by women typically wearing thin silk or nylon stockings? The seats were like yearning teeth snatching to eat our knitted female legs.

I’d like to state that the food at Falsled Kro was very delicious and really flawless from a craftsmanship point of view, no matter what I say further on. The few comments I have are of my personal palate and I state them because Falsled Kro is considered to be one of the most exclusive places in Denmark. Presumably I also state them because of my creative mind which always has to look for improvements, for some reason.

Amuse Bouche

The amuse initiating the menu was a beauty composed by müsli-topped smoked mackerel and a thin soup of smoked cheese and spiced with cloudberries, radish and cress. The soup was great and I loved the look of it. The smoked mackerel was not. Unless we talk about a good traditional Danish lunch, smoked mackerel will always be much too forcible for a refined gourmet table, no matter the quality. Mackerel was as appropriate for this soup as Wellingtons would have been for my Karen Millen dress. Smoked eel would have been much more sophisticated and would have been the perfect choice in stead.

The wine to accompany this and the following dish was a Portuguese 2006 Wine & Soul. Lda, Guru Duoro. It had a light smoky nose and a nice fruit, but a little too much oak flavour to my taste. The Danish tradition of smoked cheese stems from Funen Island and I liked the thought of chef Jean-Louis Lieffroy keeping it up and pairing the idea of smoke with the wine too.

Scallops and langoustines

Scallops, and langoustines with slight sourish artichokes and fried onion rings and a great and brown consommé of lobster flavours. A great dish combining the sweetness of the fish with the sourness from the artichokes. I love dill and I would have liked the stalk teared into smaller pieces, so I could get a bit with every mouthful.

Turbot

The next course was balanced perfectly and almost as nice as the previous one. It consisted of a delicate turbot, Jerusalem artichokes purée, a mushroom foam and a crab polenta (under the fish and not visible in the photo). I liked the texture of the tiny carrots which were perfect too, not to crisp nor to overcooked.

2005 Stuhlmuller Estate, Chardonnay, Alexander Valley accompanied and it was a Chardonnay at full throttle with a taste of overdosed oak. This is definitely not my kind of wine and it was the least interesting beverage this evening.

Wallard with foie gras

Mallard was the main course, my luck as I’ve found that I really fancy this kind of meat. The cooks had fried it to perfection, still very red inside and at the brim of being rare at the middle. The fried foie gras was very delicious and its texture very fine. The pearl onions added some acidity and were spiced with something that made the whole experience a bit more sophisticated. The ravioli was made of potatoes and stuffed with chopped onions and herbs and it was good without being spectacular.

For the game course we had a 2003 Château Rayas, Chateauneuf du Pape, Rhône. It was served light cool in temperature and it really suited the wine and its fruit and light spicy tones. After some 20 minutes in the glass the tannins were more pronounced and brought more character to the finish. Very nice.

The cheeses

The cheeses were unusually tasty, delicate flavours that were distinct but not too strong, and the texture and temperature gave a nice firm creamy feeling in my mouth. The Swedish Kvibrille though was a disappointment with its dryness and dull flavour, and I didn’t finish it.

Pre-dessert

The first dessert was very refreshing with sourness and bitter notes with the red grape fruit sorbet orange jelly and ginger crisp. Under the sorbet was bed of hazelnuts which were good with the ice-cream because of the bitterness in both. The amount of nuts was a bit too overdosed, in my opinion.

The dessert

The delicious follower was a sweet-tooth’s delight. Praliné mousse with caramel ice cream, apples compote and liquorice root formed the perfect dessert.

The wine for the dessert

To accompany the last course we had a French Grenache Noir from 1937 which was fruity and very good with the praliné dream. It didn’t at all taste like something 70 years of age.

Sweets

I must say that I had expected the selection of wines to be more intriguing than this. Of course, these wines were targeted the party as a whole and not just my taste – and therefore I can’t really complain.

Anyway, it really was a wonderful feeling just to be there at Falsled Kro and enjoy the beautiful and old sentiment of it and the staff who were so polite and helpful.

The food was classic and very delicious, but it didn’t move me. No fireworks really, or tears. What gives me a kick, is when fine dining surprises me, and that’s what I look for and go back for again and again. Would good and surprising food ever bore me. I think not. How can that not always be the challenge. I want more than back to basic good food. I want to be moved, and I want to be surprised – that’s the top experience for me about eating out.

I didn’t spend the night at the old inn but at the beautiful Hvedholm Castle. So, now I can only dream on of going back and take both the good food and the good night at Falsled Kro.